| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
[edit] HistoryThe style developed in the second half of the 19th century, and has been an important root for Cuban music up to the present day. The precursors of danzón are the contradanza, and the habanera, which are creolized Cuban dance forms. The danzón was developed, according to one's point of view, either by Manuel Saumell[4] or by Miguel Failde in Matanzas.[5] [edit] The danzón, first stageThe contradanza, the danza and the habanera were sequence dances, in which all danced together a set of figures.[6] The first use of the term danzón, which dates from the 1850s, is for just such a dance. Havana's daily paper, El Triunfo, gave a description of this earlier danzón. It was a co-ordinated dance of figures performed by groups of Matanzas blacks. The dancers held the ends of colored ribbons, and carried flower-covered arches. The group twisted and entwined the ribbons to make pleasing patterns. [7][8] This account can be corroborated by other references, for example, a traveller in Cuba noted in 1854 that black Cubans "do a kind of wreath dance, in which the whole company took part, amid innumerable artistic entanglements and disentanglements".[9] This style of danzón was performed at carnival comparsas by black groups: it is described that way before the late 1870s.[10] The interesting thing is that Faílde's first danzóns were created for just such sequence dances. Faílde himself said "In Matanzas at this time there was a kind of square dance for twenty couples who carried arches and flowers. It was really a dance of figures [sequence dance], and its moves were adapted to the tempo of the habanera, which we took over for the danzón." [11] [edit] The danzón, second stageThe form of danzón created by Miguel Faílde in 1879 (Alturas del Simson), begins with an introduction (four bars) and paseo (four bars), which are repeated and followed by a 16-bar melody. The introduction and paseo again repeat before a second melody is played. The dancers do not dance during these sections: they choose partners, stroll onto the dance floor, and begin to dance at precisely the same moment: the fourth beat of bar four of the paseo, which has a distinctive percussion pattern that's hard to miss. When the introduction is repeated the dancers stop, chat, flirt, greet their friends, and start again, right on time as the paseo finishes. Early danzón was played by groups called orquestas típicas, which were based on wind instruments. They had several brass instruments (cornet, valve trombone, ophicleide), a clarinet or two, a violin or two and tympani (kettle drums). At the beginning of the 20th century, the lighter and somewhat more elegant sound of the charanga emerged (see Early Cuban bands). Initially, they were small orchestra of 2 violins, a cello, flute, timbales, güiro, and doublebass. Charanga and típicas competed with each other for years, but after 1930 it was clear that the days of the típica were over. In 1898 a piano was included in a charanga for the first time. In Antonio María Romeu's hands a piano became standard. Its musical flexibility, its ability to influence both melody and rhythm, made it invaluable. In 1926, in his arrangement of Tres lindas cubanas, Romeu incorporated a piano solo for the first time. His was the Cuba's top charanga for many years. [edit] Danzón as scandalSimilar to other dances in the Caribbean and Latin America, the danzón was initially regarded as scandalous, especially when it began to be danced by all classes of the society. The slower rhythm of the danzón led to couples dancing closer, with sinuous movements of the hips and a lower centre of gravity. The author of a survey of prostitution in Havana devoted a whole chapter to the iniquities of dancing, and the danzón in particular.[12] Articles in newspapers and periodicals took up the theme:
Apparently, the danzón, which later became an insipid dance for older couples, was at first danced with "obscene movements" of the hips by young couples in close embrace, with bodies touching, and by couples who might come from different races...
So, behind the concern about music and dance were concerns about sexual licence, and about miscegenation, the mixing of races. As with other similar cases, the criticism was to no avail. The danzón became hugely popular, and was the dominant popular music in Cuba until the advent of the son in the 1920s. At length the Cuban government made Faílde the official inventor of the danzón – but not until 1960, by which time the danzón had become a relic, and its 'child', the chachachá, had taken over.[16] [edit] Influence of the sonIn 1910, some thirty years after Faílde's early days, José Urfé added a montuno as a final part of his El Bombín de Barretto.[1] This was a swinging section, consisting of a repeated musical phrase, which introduced something of the son into the danzón (a tactic which was to recur again in the future). Because of the popularity of the son in the 1920s and 1930s, Aniceto Diaz in Rompiendo la rutina in 1929, added a vocal part, thereby creating a new genre called the danzonete. Later development led to more synchopation, which eventually led to the danzón-chá, nuevo ritmo, cha-cha-chá, pachanga and mambo. In the 1940s, 50s and 60s the danzón and its derivatives were highly popular in Cuba, with several truly fine charangas playing most days of the week. Orquesta Aragón kept up an exceptionally high standard for many years, but the danzón itself gradually dropped out, and is now a relic dance. Danzón has never ceased to influence Cuban musicians, and it is reflected in many popular Cuban music genres, in Cuban latin jazz, salsa, songo and timba, the latter building upon the charanga orchestration. Groups like Los Van Van and Orquesta Revé developed from charangas. Their make-up and orchestration (by Juan Formell) has been so greatly altered that it is difficult to identify traces of danzón, indeed, their present styles owe more to the son than to the danzón. The addition of brass instruments such as trombones and trumpets, and conga drums signalled a wider range of music. [edit] Danzón in MexicoDanzón was also very popular in the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz, Mexico because of the strong Cuban influence in the region. Later on danzón developed in Mexico City, specially in the famous Salón México; in fact, it still survives in Mexico. It is danced in several cities and National Danzon conventions. Due to the popularity of the piece Danzón no. 2 by Arturo Márquez (b. 1950) it has been coined as the second national anthem by the Mexican people.[17]
[edit] Style and structureDanzón is elegant and virtuoso music, with dance. A danzón, in its original form, was not sung, and did not feature any improvisations, unlike some other Cuban genres. A danzón has the following typical structure:
The classic form is thus ABAC or ABACA. A danzón-chá or danzón-mambo typically add another part (D), a syncopated open vamp in which soloists may sometimes improvise, creating an ABACD or, more common, ABACAD. [edit] Mambo sectionMain article: mambo section In danzón, the mambo section is the final section of an arrangement. It was first devised by Orestes López, who added synchopated motifs taken from the son, together with improvised flute variations.[18] He called this type of danzón ritmo nuevo (new rhythm). Orestes' danzón Mambo was the start of a trend continued by Arcaño y sus Maravillas.[19][20] [edit] References
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |